[Development Guides Home](/guides) >> [Guide to Locales](/guides/guide-to-locales) # Guide to Locales - Why You Should Use UTF-8 ## Introduction The locale system's character set is **always** `utf-8`. While it is possible to use other character sets for the locale system, `utf-8` offers many benefits that other character sets lack, and has no known issues. For this reason, we **only** recommend `utf-8` locales. If you receive character encoding errors or other "garbled" text, read our [Troubleshooting](/guides/guide-to-locales/guide-to-locales-troubleshooting) documentation. ## Why utf-8? The locale system uses the `utf-8` character encoding for several specific reasons: * Character sets and collations are complicated topics. A unified standard simplifies the localization process immensely. * `utf-8` support is universal. * `utf-8` allows you to list multiple languages in a single interface or file (for example, to create a menu of available locales). * `utf-8` ensures that the locale system can interact with external systems (for example, file editors and databases). * Languages like JavaScript and Perl can natively use `utf-8` data. While it is possible for a locale to use another character encoding, we have yet to find a good reason to do so. For this reason, we will **not document** how to use a different character set. If, however, you think that you have found a valid reason to use another character set, we would be happy to consider it. Reach out to us in [Discord](http://go.cpanel.net/discord) with the technical reasons why your project requires a locale in another encoding. For more information about `utf-8`, we recommend that you watch [Dan Muey's I ♥ Unicode presentation from OSCon 2014](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C1pys4WkCBM).